04/03/18 Links Vol. 2

Wall Street Journal: Artificial intelligence could soon enhance real-time police surveillance

WSWS: Palantir Technologies: A “CIA-backed start-up”

Gotta get your story straight Techdirt: Attorney general says Texas cops can view all the camera footage they want before being questioned

Volokh: Has the “Libertarian Moment” passed?

The Federalist: Why giant high schools just can’t help messed-up kids

High Times: The 6 most ridiculous anti-weed PSAs

Motherboard: Watch this robot bat fly into your nightmares

04/03/18 Links

TechRadar: Amazon Echo and Google Home patents show the power they have to compromise your privacy

Axios: What your smart devices are listening for

Motherboard: Mass surveillance memes show our collective anxiety over government spying

The Verge: Badly implemented AI could “jeopardize democracy”, says French President Macron

ACLU: 8 questions members of Congress should ask Mark Zuckerberg

Reason: The spending bill brings us closer to national bankruptcy

The Federalist: What I saw at a college administrators’ conference will make you laugh and cry

FEE: The ongoing implosion of Venezuelan socialism

Activist Post: Study links glyphosate herbicide to shorter pregnancies

NPR: Is humanity unusual in the cosmos?

RealClearScience: Why prime numbers fascinate mathematicians

04/02/18 Overnight Links

CNET: Cloudfare’s 1.1.1.1.: The new privacy tool that would speed up your internet, too

Business Insider: US seeks end to Supreme Court privacy battle with Microsoft on overseas data

Ars Technica: Trump admin wants to track 14 million U.S. visitors’ social media history

The Times: Privacy fears as Scottish police use spy tools to break into mobile phones

Techdirt: French government looking to copy Germany’s disastrous anti-hate speech laws

TechCrunch: DARPA wants new ideas for autonomous drone swarms

Quartz: Musk and Zuckerberg are fighting over whether we rule technology…or it rules us

ProPublica: John Bolton skewed intelligence, say people who worked for him

Antiwar.com: If John Bolton is right, then Pearl Harbor was perfectly legal

Alternet: Weapons for anyone: Donald Trump and the art of the arms deal

BoingBoing: Watch countless American news anchors mindlessly “report” the same script

Washington Post: Trump may not intend  to start a war, but he sure could bumble into one

The Hill: CNN lost its way in struggle to find an audience

Gizmodo: The horrific April Fools’ pranks of the 19th century

Science News: The science behind cancer warnings on coffee is murky at best

Overnight quote

From Garet Garret’s essential essay, The Rise of Empire:

“We have crossed the boundary that lies between Republic and Empire. If you ask when, the answer is that you cannot make a single stroke between day and night; the precise moment does not matter. There was no painted sign to say: “You now are entering Imperium.” 

Yet it was a very old road and the voice of history was saying: “Whether you know it or not, the act of crossing may be irreversible.” And now, not far ahead, is a sign that reads: “No U-turns.” 

If you say there were no frightening omens, that is true. The political foundations did not quake, the graves of the fathers did not fly open, the Constitution did not tear itself up. If you say people did not will it, that also is true. But if you say therefore it has not happened, then you have been so long bemused by words that your mind does not believe what the eye can see, even as in the jungle the terrified primitive, on meeting the lion, importunes magic by saying to himself, “He is not there.” 

That a republic may vanish is an elementary school book fact.”

Overnight quotes

From H.L. Mencken’s essay, The Politician:

“AFTER damning politicians up hill and down dale for many years, as rogues and vagabonds, frauds and scoundrels, I sometimes suspect that, like everyone else, I often expect too much of them. Though faith and confidence are surely more or less foreign to my nature, I not infrequently find myself looking to them to be able, diligent, candid, and even honest. Plainly enough, that is too large an order, as anyone must realize who reflects upon the manner in which they reach public office. They seldom if ever get there by merit alone, at least in democratic states. Sometimes, to be sure, it happens, but only by a kind of miracle. They are chosen normally for quite different reasons, the chief of which is simply their power to impress and enchant the intellectually underprivileged. It is a talent like any other, and when it is exercised by a radio crooner, a movie actor or a bishop, it even takes on a certain austere and sorry respectability. But it is obviously not identical with a capacity for the intricate problems of statecraft.

Those problems demand for their solution—when they are soluble at all, which is not often—a high degree of technical proficiency, and with it there should go an adamantine kind of integrity, for the temptations of a public official are almost as cruel as those of a glamor girl or a dipsomaniac. But we train a man for facing them, not by locking him up in a monastery and stuffing him with wisdom and virtue, but by turning him loose on the stump. If he is a smart and enterprising fellow, which he usually is, he quickly discovers there that hooey pleases the boobs a great deal more than sense. Indeed, he finds that sense really disquiets and alarms them—that it makes them, at best, intolerably uncomfortable, just as a tight collar makes them uncomfortable, or a speck of dust in the eye, or the thought of Hell. The truth, to the overwhelming majority of mankind, is indistinguishable from a headache. After trying a few shots of it on his customers, the larval statesman concludes sadly that it must hurt them, and after that he taps a more humane keg, and in a little while the whole audience is singing “Glory, glory, hallelujah,” and when the returns come in the candidate is on his way to the White House.”

Rights, encoded into law, chiefly protect minorities

With all the talk recently of greater restrictions on gun ownership and even repeal of the Second Amendment, a point must be made that is not made often enough.  It is that our rights as citizens provide a far greater defense against injustice for minorities than the majority.  The majority by definition hold the reins of power.  They vote their people into office, they get their bills and regulations passed.  They control the government at every level, for the most part.  The majority therefore has no real use of a Bill of Rights.  But while those rights exist for the benefit of all, minorities, either in skin color, language, political opinion, or what have you, are the primary beneficiaries of inalienable rights.  They are effectively a shield against the tyranny of the majority, be the First, Second, Fourth, or the rest.  A majority of people who hold the same opinion of government have no need of First Amendment protections, only the minority viewpoints and ideas require such protection. Which is why I find a dissonance among those who ostensibly champion the causes of minorities in this country.  Because they are the very people clamoring most loudly for a repeal of the right to gun ownership, deriding “gun culture”, and waging a veritable war against one of the rights most crucial for the protection of the most vulnerable minorities in this country. Minorities, whether sexual, racial,  ideological, face disproportionate ostracism and violence on the part of the majority.  They therefore must have their right of self-defense held inviolable against the continuous attacks on it.  Minorities of all stripes must, therefore, be on guard against those who profess to speak for them.

03/30/18 Overnight Links

NY Daily News: Court allows NYPD to hide records of Muslim surveillance

The Verge: All non-citizens will have to disclose social media accounts at U.S. border

Motherboard: The FBI used classified hacking tools in ordinary criminal investigations

Washington Examiner: Judge ridicules suggestion that ‘Deep State’ made him dismiss NSA lawsuits

The Intercept: “We know where your kids live”: How John Bolton once threatened an international official

The American Conservative: The anti-liberty boomerang of U.S. militarism

MintPressNews: Ecuador cuts off Julian Assange’s internet over social media posts

Mises: Secession is going mainstream

Reason: Keep testing self-driving cars, even if they kill people

Futurism: Scientists found a galaxy with almost no dark matter. Here’s what that means.

Overnight quotations

From Albert Jay Nock:

“I once voted at a Presidential election. There being no real issue at stake, and neither candidate commanding any respect whatever, I cast my vote for Jefferson Davis, of Mississippi. I knew Jeff was dead, but I voted on Artemus Ward’s principle that if we can’t have a live man who amounts to anything, by all means let’s have a first-class corpse. I still think that vote was as effective as any of the millions that have been cast since then.”

And on a more serious note:

“Even a successful revolution, even if such a thing were conceivable, against the military tyranny which is Statism’s last expedient, would accomplish nothing. The people would be as thoroughly indoctrinated with Statism after the revolution as they were before, and therefore the revolution would be no revolution, but a coup d’Etat, by which the citizen would gain nothing but a mere change of oppressors. There have been many revolutions in the last twenty-five years, and thus has been the sum of their history. They amount to no more than an impressive testimony to the great truth that there can be no right action except there be right thinking behind it.As long as the easy, attractive, superficial philosophy of Statism remains in control of the citizen’s mind, no beneficent social change can be affected, whether by revolution or by any other means.”

03/29/18 Overnight Links

Motherboard: Apple’s position on privacy is paying off: “Apple has its own host of issues—labor practices up and down its supply chain, walled gardens, the environmental toll of creating highly intricate devices that are difficult to repair and impossible to upgrade. But Apple’s fundamental business model does not focus on turning its customers into sellable datasets. While Apple has had every opportunity to turn its devices and services into data collection opportunities, it has instead largely focused on a straightforward business model of selling and facilitating the sale of goods, services, and software.

Apple’s focus on protecting its customers’ privacy has given it the moral high ground—both when the FBI asked the company to hack into an iPhone, and now, when it seems Silicon Valley is going to drown with the constant drip-drip-drip of new privacy abuses becoming widely known.”

The Intercept: Department of Justice charges FBI whistleblower under Espionage Act

Washington Times: IG will probe FBI abuses of FISA after Trump campaign surveillance

Activist Post: Five thousand inventions in limbo under “secrecy orders” at the U.S. patent office

EFF: Thinking about what you need in a secure messenger

JOHN WHITEHEAD: If you really want to save lives, take aim at government violence

FEE: Administrative law is the real “Deep State”: “What’s the greatest threat to liberty in America? …the enormous rogue beast known as the administrative state. Sometimes called the regulatory state or the deep state, it is a government within the government… Unelected bureaucrats not only write their own laws, they also interpret these laws and enforce them in their own courts with their own judges. All this is in blatant violation of the Constitution… Mr. Hamburger, 60, a constitutional scholar…says, sitting in his office at Columbia Law School… “The government can choose to…use an administrative proceeding where you don’t have the right to be heard by a real judge or a jury and you don’t have the full due process of law…” In volume and complexity, the edicts from federal agencies exceed the laws passed by Congress by orders of magnitude. “The administrative state has become the government’s predominant mode of contact with citizens,” Mr. Hamburger says. …“The framers of the Constitution were very clear about this,” Mr. Hamburger says…”Congress cannot delegate the legislative powers to an agency, just as judges cannot delegate their power to an agency.””

Mises: How the White House hijacked the ability to declare war

RealClearScience: Meet your interstitium, a newfound ‘organ’

03/28/18 Links

Motherboard: China is using its facial recognition tech to send jaywalkers fines through text messages

The Guardian: Beware the smart toaster: 18 tips for surviving the surveillance age

NPR: A needle in a legal haystack could sink a major Supreme Court privacy case

Forbes: Can government force you to speak contrary to your beliefs?

Reason: Gerrymandering is out of control

High Times: Marijuana arrests plummet in New Orleans after policy change

Mises: The difference between good globalism and bad globalism

Gizmodo: Could Higgs Boson and primordial black holes explain dark matter?